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If Fashion Ads Treated Men And Women The Same Way

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Hypersexualized advertisements showing women's bodies (or disembodied parts) are all too commonplace -- but would we react to these ads differently if they objectified men the same way they do women?

(Some images are NSFW.)

fashion ads

In a July 9 piece for TakePart, writers Holly Eagleson and Lauren Wade remade particularly controversial ads, replacing female models with male ones.

The pair focused on images related to men who have had an active hand in objectifying female models. For example, the pair used Sisley and Tom Ford campaigns shot by fashion photographer Terry Richardson, who has for almost a decade been accused of sexual harassment and taking advantage of models. They also used American Apparel ads, pointing to the company's recent controversy with former CEO Dov Charney as another example of sexism and objectification in the industry. Charney is accused of numerous work-related "sexual transgressions," including making one former employee his "sex slave" shortly after her 18th birthday.

Wade spoke to The Huffington Post about their decision to focus on images linked to Charney and Richardson. She said in an email:
Charney and Richardson are really representative of a specific form of sexism and objectification in media today. Their collaborations, in particular for American Apparel, depict women in sexually vulnerable, pornographic positions where a lot of the model's facial expressions look like they've been drugged or they're drunk. These images are predatory. They depict women being taken advantage of and it's supposed to look "sexy" and sell sweatshirts?



fashion ads

"I think photoshopping men's faces and bodies into these ads points a finger at how ridiculously demoralizing they really are," Wade told HuffPost. "My hope in pointing this finger is to spark and keep a conversation going—especially amongst women. I think as a whole we've just gotten used to seeing women depicted this way and the only way we can change it is if we stop staying silent and demand change."

fashion ads

The remade ads show us just how uncomfortable the originals are. Hopefully these images will inspire people to critically question the way advertisers are working -- and avoid brands that make a point of needlessly sexualizing women.

Mural Depicts Malala As Rosie The Riveter, Two Icons Who Know No Limits

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Since she survived a gruesome Taliban attack nearly two years ago, Malala Yousafzai has been called many things -- an activist, a leader, a much-needed voice of an oppressed people.

But one Texas artist has reimagined the brave 17-year-old as a bold American symbol that no one has suggested before: Rosie the Riveter.



Anat Ronen, a self-taught urban artist, painted the mural -- titled "Yes She Can!" -- at the Avis Frank Gallery in Houston in May. It melds Yousafzai’s face together with the signature features of the World War II icon.

The 1940s image represented the strength and wherewithal required of women who went to work in factories while the men went overseas to fight.

rosie the riveter

Ronen feels Yousafzai, in her mission to bring universal education to every child, bears many of the same brave and empowered characteristics of those American women during that period.

"I felt I wanted to combine a symbol of Western "warrior" with her image, to maximize the symbolism and through somewhat controversy, promote her agenda," Ronen told BuzzFeed.

Adjacent to the image of Yousafzai’s face, Ronen added one of the activist’s most enduring quotes: "All I want is education. And I’m afraid of no one."

Yousafzai offered the courageous statement in an interview when she was only 11 and was well aware that she could be a target of the Taliban, according to The Washington Post. The Pakistani girl decided to defy the terrorist’s group decrees, and to continue going to school and blogging about her experiences, despite Taliban threats.

Ronen was aware that critics would likely take issue with her blending together a traditional U.S. symbol with someone of foreign descent, but was confident that it would ultimately come together naturally.

"I sensed they felt uneasy with the fact that I am distorting one of America’s greatest symbols," Ronen told BuzzFeed. "After the text was added, everything fell in place and people are able to make the connection and even if they never heard of Malala before, they now do."


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350 Musicians Gather In Brooklyn To Play Together For First Time, Multicultural Masterpiece Ensues

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On the longest day of the year, hundreds of musicians came together to illustrate the beauty in creating community through sound.

Every year on the summer solstice, the Make Music New York Festival unites musicians together from all walks of life. This year on June 21, musicians answered an online call to gather at the Brooklyn Public Library and play "100+ BPM," a piece composed by Red Baraat's Sunny Jain, according to NPR. In total, 350 music makers -- ranging from Brazilian samba drummers to Indian wedding band musicians -- showed up on the library's steps to play together for the first time. The result was an epic sound, encapsulating both unity and diversity, showcased in the video above.

This is more about community than about sound,” Jain told The Brooklyn Paper of the song's purpose. Even the song's name aims to reflect this idea: The title, "100+ BPM", stands for both "beats per minute" as well as "Brooklyn Public Music," a term that he coined to illustrate community building.

To create a communal experience through sound, Jain drew from various influences ranging from traditional Bhangra music as well as the New Orleans jazz culture. “Down in New Orleans, everything you do involves music," he told the source. "There’s certainly a great music community here, but it’s that idea of music spilling into the streets -- people following along whether they play or not -- that has been in my heart for a while."

Prior to the concert, Jain told the Brooklyn Paper, "I'll just be up there, jumping for joy."

And that's exactly what we did after hearing the performance.

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Two Japanese Schoolgirls Play Tag, Are Obviously Super Ninjas

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A high-speed chase has never been this epic -- especially when it involves two Japanese schoolgirls armed with nothing but ninja-like skills.

In this video -- an advertisement for the Japanese soda brand, Suntory -- these two have the chase of a lifetime. And the footage gets increasingly insane: what starts as classroom acrobatics ends in roof-jumping.

Even though it's unclear until the end that the video is, in fact, an advertisement -- at the last second, the duo pops open Suntory sodas -- it doesn't matter. The handheld-style shooting and the girls' parkour-like stunts definitely win the day.


Broadway Lights Will Be Dimmed In Elaine Stritch's Memory

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NEW YORK (AP) — Broadway marquees will be dimmed in memory of a Tony- and Emmy-winning actress who epitomized New York and the theater world.

Elaine Stritch died Thursday at age 89 in her home state of Michigan. She was far from her longtime adopted home. But Broadway — and New York —immediately sent their love. The marquees of the Great White Way will be dimmed for one minute at 7:45 p.m. Eastern on Friday.

The feisty actress found new fans as Alec Baldwin's mother on television's "30 Rock." But she was best known for her stage work — especially her candid one-woman memoir and in the Stephen Sondheim musical "Company."

Broadway League Executive Director Charlotte St. Martin says Stritch will always be remembered as an important part of Broadway's rich history.

Here's Why 'Vertical' Is The New Gardening Term You Need To Know

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Don't have a backyard big enough to get your green thumb on? Look up, and you might find all the space you need.

This approach, known as vertical gardening, has been used to maximize space in urban environments and to enhance landscapes when there is no land. Granted, not every vertical garden will reach the impressive height of 24 stories and cover 24,638.59-square-feet like the appropriately-named Treehouse in Singapore, which recently earned the Guinness World Record for largest green wall. But it's nice to know the effect can be achieved, even if it is on a (much) smaller scale.

Just consider it a form of container gardening, using the wall as your container. Here's some inspiration from around the world to get you started and a step-by-step tutorial if you're serious about taking your gardening skills to new heights.

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Paris, France




bangalore
Bangalore, India




madrid
Madrid, Spain




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London, England




copenhagen
Copenhagen, Denmark




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Mexico City, Mexico




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Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line "Project submission." (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

Stop What You're Doing: This Is How Instant Ramen Noodles Are Made

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Ramen noodles are an undeniable staple: they're the holy grail of cheap and easy dining for college students, and now, they're taking over the trendy food circle with Ramen burgers.

But are you ready to learn how these peculiar noodles are made?

In this short from Potluck Video, a crew travels to Sun Noodles in New Jersey to learn the magic that goes into making this starchy snack.

The process might not be what you expect. (And it's far different from the traditional technique of making ramen noodles by hand.)

Want to read more from HuffPost Taste? Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Tumblr.

Women's Rowing Team's Naked Calendar Briefly Banned On Facebook

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Students from the Warwick women's rowing team decided to strip down for charity -- and found themselves held up to a double standard.

This week, Facebook banned the group's page citing "inappropriate content" -- but allowed an identical page for the men's team's naked calendar to remain.

(Some images may be considered NSFW.)

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Following in the tradition of Warwick's men's rowing team, who have been selling naked calendars since 2009, the women's rowing team shot their first nude calendar in 2013 to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support -- creating quite a splash.

warwick rowing

Calendar organizer Sophie Bell told The Huffington Post that the team's Facebook page had received numerous complaints regarding images from the 2013 calendar, before the page was temporarily deleted this week. "Facebook has unpublished our page a few times since we created it, due to what it deemed 'inappropriate images,'" she told The Huffington Post.

warwick rowing

Team members felt that they were being unfairly punished.

"We have worked hard to create a tasteful and artistic calendar in which the girls bodies are strategically covered," rower Frankie Salzano told HuffPost. "The photographs we feel are an accurate representation of an athletic female body, something to be celebrated and not shunned, especially because there are Facebook pages that are degrading to the female form."

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“All of the girls are strategically covered up and our calendar has been praised for [that]," recent Warwick graduate Hettie Reed told HuffPost UK. “The photos are no different from the holiday snaps of men and women that appear on everyone’s Facebook feeds."

warwick rowing

After receiving hundreds of messages from supporters of the Warwick team, Facebook overturned the ban on the page early Friday morning. A post on the updated page reads:
We are so pleased that our tasteful nude calendar which we all are proud to be a part of is has rightfully removed its label of being pornographic, explicit and a violation of the terms of facebook and we thank each and every one of you for your part in it!


The 2014 calendar is available here.

SAY CHEESE: Japan's Most Famous 'Schoolgirl' Is A Man

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From the neck up, Hideaki Kobayashi is a middle-aged, bald man with a bushy mustache.

From the neck down, this Japanese man could pass for a Japanese schoolgirl as he parades all over Tokyo dressed in "Seifuku," the name for the sailor outfits worn by teenage girls.

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The 50-something Kobayashi started dressing up as a teenage girl about three years ago. Before that, he was a computer engineer and an accomplished photographer — careers that he's kept alive.

He made his debut at an art and design event, but joked about the reasons behind his decision to dress like a giddy schoolgirl.

"That's a difficult question," Kobayashi told Kotaku.com last year. "It's not really something I've thought too deeply about. Hrm. I guess it's because sailor suits look good on me?"

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As he's become more comfortable in his own skin -- and the schoolgirl skirts -- Kobayashi has become more direct about his intentions.

"Japan society is all about conforming to the other people," Kobayashi told CNN. "I just want to wear something cute."

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Kobayashi is attracted to women, and identifies as a man even when he's challenging gender norms.

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It seems to be working for him.

Even though Kobayashi sometimes gets rude comments from men on the streets of Tokyo, he's became an internet celebrity.

He's proud that he's sought out by young girls who want to take pictures with him and post them online, Oddity Central reports.

Kobayashi's reputation has spread so far that one Japanese prep school has hired him to teach teenagers to think for themselves.

"If there's something you want to do, do that," Kobayashi told CNN. "That's my message. Be yourself."


hideaki kobayashi




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Here's Your Glorious, Sparkly First Glimpse Of Andrew Rannells As Hedwig

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We didn't think anyone could possible take the place of the almighty force that is Neil Patrick Harris in his epic Tony Award-winning role as Hedwig in "Hedwig in the Angry Inch." Then we saw this.

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Move over, NPH. You're looking at a dolled-up Andrew Rannells, who you may recognize as Elijah from HBO's "Girls," or Elder Price from "The Book of Mormon." And glory be, the man looks good in glitter. We were worried that no mere mortal could match Harris' portrayal of the East German transgender rock star, but judging from that fierce glare, Rannells is not messing around.

We can't wait to see what Harris' successor will bring to the iconic role.

Harris' last appearance in the Broadway version of John Cameron Mitchell's original 1998 musical is scheduled for August 17 and Rannells is up August 20. Get your tickets here.

3 Young Cancer Fighters From Powerful Viral Photo Are Now All Cancer-Free Or In Remission

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A moving photograph that showed strength and community in the face of adversity, now has another message to share -- triumph.

Earlier this year, this touching image of three young girls who were all battling cancer went viral. In it, the children hold one another and draw strength from each other. Now, all three girls are cancer-free or in remission, according to their Facebook pages.

kids cancer photo

The emotive photo, showing the girls aged 3, 6, and 4, was taken by Oklahoma-based photographer Lora Scantling. The image has the caption, "Sometimes strength comes in knowing that you are not alone!" and the girls, who didn't know one another before the photo shoot, have since become close friends.

When it was taken four months ago, Rylie, on the far left, had just beaten stage five kidney cancer, Rheann, in the middle, had brain cancer and Ainsley, on the right, was in remission from leukemia.

"For those of you just joining us on Rheann's page I can say that Rylie, Ainsley, and Rheann are now in remission!!!" reads a post on Rheann's Facebook page. "Rheann was just declared in remission very recently and as of her last MRI (on July 2nd) she is STILL clear!"

The good news comes more than a year after doctors told Rheann's family to prepare for the worst, Yahoo News reported. The 6-year-old, who stands in the center of the photo, had a rare form of the disease, called mucoid spindle sarcoma but can now join the other two girls in celebrating. Since Rheann's diagnosis in 2012, she has undergone five brain surgeries, chemotherapy and proton radiation.

"The doctors didn’t think she would make it through last summer," her mother, Valerie Franklin, told Yahoo, "but she sure proved them wrong."

Just look at these courageous fighters now:













Congratulations, girls!

To see more of Lora Scantling's photography, visit her website or Facebook page.

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DJ Turns The Sounds Of A Classroom Into The Feel Good Song Of The Summer

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Pencils on desks. High-pitched giggles. Balls launched (briefly) into the air. We bet you've never heard the sounds of a school quite like this before.

Edgar Camago is a San Francisco third grade teacher and also a music producer. For the second time, he's combined his two livelihoods to create an original song using sounds from the classroom as well as vocals from his students, and instruments played by them.

It's a fitting anthem for the rising fourth graders as they tackle new challenges, and a good reminder for the rest of us: "Fight, fight, fight! Fight the good fight!"

This 'Rude' Cover Turns The Sexist Chart-Topper Into A Feminist Anthem

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Magic!'s "Rude" kicked Iggy Azalea's "Fancy" from the throne atop the Billboard Hot 100, but the song has inspired more backlash than loving remakes.

"Rude" tells the dumb tale of a dude who asks for a dad's blessing to marry his daughter. The father says no and the narrator says, "I'm gonna marry her anyway." Since we live in a time and country where women don't need permission to do things, non-fans have taken to YouTube to promote anti-"Rude" covers. Earlier this week, Benji Cowart, a father of three, wrote a response from the father's point of view, which has been viewed over six million times.

Meanwhile, YouTuber Nicky Costabile turned the sexist song into a feminist anthem. Lyrics credited to Marisa DiFrisco say what we're all thinking: "I belong to no one for the rest of my life, say no, say no, is this a joke, say I decide my husband til the day I die but at this rate I'd rather have no one."

Laura Palmer's House Could Become A 'Twin Peaks' Museum, Shrine And B&B

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When this lovely home in Everett, Washington popped up for sale on the web, most people didn't think twice. But "Twin Peaks" fans are a rare breed. The brightest devotees of the trippy '90s classic clearly recognized this "charming 1930s home in the heart of Historic Rucker Hill" as the ex-home of the beautiful enigma known as Laura Palmer.

twin peaks laura palmer

That's right, the humble abode of Leland, Sarah and Laura is actually up for sale IRL. The charming manse was featured in the show's pilot as well as the film "Fire Walk With Me." As the LAist points out, many interior shots took place on a sound stage in L.A. made to resemble the house. Although the listing made no mention of the home's former Lynchian life, in typical "Twin Peaks" cult following fashion, the connection was soon made.

Fan site Welcome to Twin Peaks posted the finding, comparing photos from the listing with those from the show. Strangely, the rocking chair from Laura's bedroom is still in the house. It's good to know even 25 years after the show, "Twin Peaks" fanatics haven't lost their touch.

But the unparalleled fan following of David Lynch's surreal suburban mystery doesn't simply post a listing of Laura Palmer's house. Oh no, they start a Kickstarter campaign to buy the house themselves and transform it into a Twin Peaks museum, shrine and Bed & Breakfast.

Seattle's Stephen Lange is the man behind the mission. His campaign "The Palmer House -- Twin Peaks Museum and Tourist Destination" aims to raise enough money to buy Laura's house and transform it into an event space and functioning Bed&Breakfast, eventually redesigned to resemble its 25-year-old self. Come now, who wouldn't want to stay in this not-at-all-creepy lodgings?

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Get out of here, BOB!



"With 4+ bedrooms, the residence can sleep up to 8 people an evening, with a full kitchen, and a renovated Red Room movie theater in the basement," the Kickstarter explains. "The home will also come stocked with a full library of DVDs and music from the series, so you can fully immerse yourself in the Twin Peaks vibe." Lange is trying to raise $600,000 by August 3. Offers have already been placed on the home, which is listed for $549,950, so those moved by Lange's proposition must act fast.

Donating to the cause will get you many a "Twin Peaks"-centric reward, from an "I Saved the Palmer House" poster to complimentary pie and coffee, ostensibly served black as midnight on a moonless night. If you dream of sleeping in a spooky house where demon spirits once lived and David Lynch placed his literal, divine body, head to the Kickstarter ASAP and see how you can help.

Hyperrealist Drawings To Make You Drool All Over Your Keyboard

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Another day, another amazingly talented hyperrealist artist to make you painfully self-aware of your own lack of drawing skills. Don't mind us, we're just having a moment over Monica Lee, the Malaysian artist whose graphite drawings capture details of the flesh we can barely perceive, let alone reproduce.

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Lee, who's been making the internet rounds as of late, doesn't just recreate the people, scenarios, birds and plants she encounters. Lee depicts her subjects with such exaggerated accuracy that she invites the viewer into a heightened reality, where freckles and beard hairs and dew drops and artichoke furs are miniature marvels to revel in, not overlook.

"I like to challenge myself with complex portraits especially people with freckles or beard," the artist explained to Ignant. "And I’m addicted to details. I like drawing in as much details as I can into my work." Staring for a while at Lee's meticulous works feels almost like an optical illusion; when you look away the world looks just a bit different.

Get a taste of Lee's hungry eye and obedient hand below and try not to drool too much as you fall deeper under the spell of her hypnotic depictions. For more pencil-shaded goodness, check out her Instagram. For more hyperrealists we love, head here, here or here.


Artist Transforms His Childhood Doodles Into Mesmerizing Grown-Up Masterpieces

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Even the most imaginative of adult artists can't compete with some of the effortless and strangely brilliant doodles of a child. Admit it, no matter how many art classes you take, it's hard to capture the wild imagination and unbridled confidence that come so easily with youth. Most often the doodles of magical creatures, wild beasts and illogical shapes that filled many a child notebook are sadly lost to time or buried in the murky depths of your parents garage.

For Telmo Pieper, however, things unfolded a bit differently.

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The Rotterdam-based artist discovered a box of his childhood drawings hidden in storage, and decided to see what would happen if the doodles, like Pieper himself, had the opportunity to grow up. The resulting series, titled "Kiddie Arts," juxtaposes artworks made when Pieper was four years old with his contemporary, and technologically advanced, reinterpretations. Pencil scribblings of snails, sharks and butterflies are placed alongside their fully realized selves, made using a spray can or Wacom tablet.

"I was fascinated by how strange and great the line drawings were from when I was little," Pieper explained to TIME. "Surrealistic feel with a realistic subject -- impossible to copy the style but possible to work it out further. So I did." The series feels like a form of artistic time travel, merging past and present in a playful yet profound way. Also, we just love little Pieper's smooshy interpretation of a grizzly bear.

Pieper isn't the first artist to draw inspiration from a child's creativity. Artist Wendy Tsao took a slightly different approach, transforming childhood creations into three-dimensional stuffed animals. Nevertheless the sentiment remains the same. As Pablo Picasso put it: "Every child is an artist. The problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up."

Take a look at Pieper's magical creations and let us know if you're inspired to revisit your pre-K masterpieces in the comments.

A Love Letter To Louise Bourgeois, A Feminist Icon Whether She Likes It Or Not

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Louis Bourgeois is a feminist art icon, even if she -- in some mythical afterlife populated by giant spiders and contorted, alien figures -- would hate the label. When she was alive, she was aloof on the subject. "Some of my works are, or try to be feminist, and others are not feminist," she proclaimed in an interview with the San Francisco Museum of Art.

"I am lucky to have been brought up by a mother who was a feminist and fortunate enough to have married a husband who was a feminist, and I have raised sons who are feminists," Germaine Greer quoted her as saying in The Guardian, not long after Bourgeois' death in 2010. The artist, famous for her mammoth sculptures of spiders, pointedly leaves herself out of the list, insinuating not a rejection of the -ism, necessarily, but perhaps a bit of condescension toward critics eager to associate her with the term, no matter her opinions.

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Louise Bourgeois, Spider, 2003. Collection The Easton Foundation. Photo: Christopher Burke.


Bourgeois does owe a lot to the feminist movement. Born in Paris in 1911, she spent many of her early years known merely as the wife of Robert Goldwater, the American art historian with whom she moved to New York in the late 1930s. Though she drew, painted, sculpted and printed throughout the 1940s and '50s, Bourgeois didn't receive real art world attention until her 50s. She had to wait more than a few years before she moved from the periphery of art critics' minds to somewhere closer to the center. During that time, the feminist movement was blooming.

"The specific agent of change was feminism, the most pervasive and radical of the many 'pluralist' constituencies of the last ten years," Robert Storr wrote in Art in America back in 1983, around 8 years after she graced the cover of Artforum and one year after her retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. "And more particularly the insistence of feminist artists and critics we look hard at for whatever was formerly considered 'marginal' in art, and hardest of all at the very notion that a 'mainstream' existed."

For a woman who loathed the term "woman artist," it seems to many so important that she was a woman artist at the time she rose to recognition. Amidst the hyper masculine aesthetic of the Abstract Expressionists and the coy fraternity of Surrealism, she quite literally forged ahead, casting "anti-form" creatures from marble and bronze. From her "Femme Maison (Woman House)" paintings created circa 1946-47, in which the bodies of nude women are forcefully squished into the confining spaces of a home, to her 1968 sculpture, "Janus Fleuri," a piece curiously sexualized if not for its inclusion of imagery that resembles both male and female genitalia, themes of femininity and gender roles reared their heads.

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Louise Bourgeois, Lady in Waiting, 2003. Collection The Easton Foundation. Photo: Christopher Burke.


A fascination with the body is apparent throughout her career. While men like Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman were swimming in color fields, she rendered her self-portrait as a torso, pieced together with bizarre bulges and crevices that seem endlessly out of place. "That, she said, was how she felt about her physical self," Michael McNay wrote, "and by extension, how women generally felt, even while they studied copies of Vogue or Harper's Bazaar."

The list could go on: There's the 1968 piece, "Fillette," which was obviously a massive penis sculpture, one that happened to make its way into a photograph by Robert Mapplethorpe. There's the 1974 tableau, "The Destruction of the Father," a gathering of mammary-like objects and penile knobs said to represent the "sacrificial evisceration of a body," more specifically "a pompous father, whose presence deadens the dinner hour night after night." There's the 1984 "Nature Study," appearing like a headless sphinx covered in breasts and equipped with Doberman Pinscher-esque claws.

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Louise Bourgeois, Untitled, 2000. Private Collection, Courtesy Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Christopher Burke.


She might not have been singing the song of feminist sirens, but her work relentlessly juxtaposed male and female forms, revealing hybrid bodies and aggressive amalgamations of phallic and yonic imagery; sexual subject matter from a woman's gaze.

Her vocalized stance on a woman's social position versus that of a man's was at times confusing. She seemed simultaneously angry at the idea that masculinity and its own brand of ego were wrapped up in a penis, and disappointed that feminine beauty often went hand-in-hand with passivity.

"It's a dialogue between a man and a woman," Bourgeois recounted in another interview with SFMOMA, cryptically titled "Louis Bourgeois on Gender Roles." She outlines an interesting, if not depressing scenario attached to a phantom piece of art, a retelling that's almost incomprehensible as a total story, but a strange exchange nonetheless that gives glimpses of her own sentiments toward men and women.

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Louise Bourgeois, Untitled, 2002. Collection The Easton Foundation. Photo: Christopher Burke.


"You know what men are like," she says to an unidentified male companion. "For example, it's about a man who discovers a vaccine. He discovers a vaccine, he's a bigwig. As for her, she stumbles upon a little sofa at the auction rooms. Understand? That's the relationship. If that doesn't convince you, I can give you other examples. For example, when he speaks. Of course, when he speaks the world stops in its tracks. Whereas she, she just chitchats. And when it's time for dinner, he's the chef. He prepares this wonderful meal! Whereas she, she just cooks. Just cooks. And he feels good, he whistles. He whistles like a blackbird. Whereas she whistles to herself. And when he feels good he touches you, right? He touches you. Whereas she, she brushes against you. To no effect... like pissing in the wind."

It wasn't until the 1990s that she went the way of the spider. Sculpting for heights of 35 feet, she created her first arachnid in 1999 and they quickly proliferated, as spiders are wont to do. Titled "Maman," the spindly creatures and their egg sacs, made from stainless steal, marble and bronze, stood as tributes to Bourgeois' mother, Josephine. "The Spider is an ode to my mother. She was my best friend. Like a spider, my mother was a weaver... spiders are helpful and protective, just like my mother."

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Louise Bourgeois, Untitled, 2001. Collection The Easton Foundation. Photo: Christopher Burke.


Dark, ominous, and absent of the smooth curves of femininity, "Maman" projected a very different female object in places like Bilbao, Tokyo and Ottawa. Frightening yet maternal, sinister yet life-giving, antagonistic yet martyred -- these contradictions seemed Bourgeois' way of breaking through the gender binary, up until her last days at the age of 98. "I have fantastic pleasure in breaking everything," she once said. Yet towards the end of her life, she created, with delicacy, particularly in the realm of tapestry. This was yet another way of honoring her mother, and achieved a sense of "reparation."

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Louise Bourgeois, Spider, 2007. Collection The Easton Foundation. Photo: Frédéric Delpech.


Her defiance, her arguably unmatched persistence, her visual tenacity -- these qualities will forever cement Bourgeois' place in feminist art history. Not because she's a woman artist -- a label hardly derogatory -- but because she pushed the boundaries of what it meant to make art.

“Feminist art is not some tiny creek running off the great river of real art," as Andrea Dworkin declared. "It is not some crack in an otherwise flawless stone. It is, quite spectacularly I think, art which is not based on the subjugation of one half of the species." Bourgeois should be proud to count herself amongst those who made feminist art.

"Louise Bourgeois L’araignée et les tapisseries" is currently on view at Hauser & Wirth Zürich until July 26. All images included in this post are courtesy of Hauser & Wirth unless otherwise noted.

12 Perfect Edgar Degas Quotes To Help Unlock Your Inner Artist

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On one July 19, 180 years ago this Saturday, a man named Hilaire-Germain-Edgar De Gas was born in Paris, France. You may know him better as Edgar Degas, and you may know him best for his dreamy paintings behind the scenes of the ballet.

Ballet is an art form that privileges all things perfect and pristine, but Degas took inspiration from the dance's sloppy moments i between -- every hunched back, sullied slipper, slumped posture and awkward stretch. Degas took his fascination with the beauty of ugliness outside the ballet studio as well, rendering cabaret singers and circus performers as something monstrous. Not to mention that "L'Absinthe" painting; it doesn't get much darker than that.

Though in retrospect Degas is often referred to as an impressionist, he considered himself a realist, illuminating his notion that reality often lies beyond what they eye can perceive.

In honor of Degas' big 180, we've compiled some words of wisdom from the iconic artist, illuminating the workings of one of the greatest mind's art history has ever known. From his fear of fame to hatred of art critics, the following quotes will give a glimpse into the twisted and brilliant mind of good ol' Hilaire. Prepare to be inspired.

1. On the importance of a little mystery

degas

"A painting requires a little mystery, some vagueness, and some fantasy. When you always make your meaning perfectly plain you end up boring people."



2. On the need to challenge yourself

deg

"You must aim high, not in what you are going to do at some future date, but in what you are going to make yourself do to-day. Otherwise, working is just a waste of time."



3. On the unpredictable nature of success

back

"There is a kind of success that is indistinguishable from panic."



4. On the questionable veracity of art critics

art

"Art critic! Is that a profession? When I think we are stupid enough, we painters, to solicit those people's compliments and to put ourselves into their hands! What shame! Should we even accept that they talk about our work?"



5. On the importance of opening your eyes

degas

"We were created to look at one another, weren't we?"



6. On the myth of spontaneity

dance

"I assure you no art was ever less spontaneous than mine. What I do is the result of reflection and study of the great masters; of inspiration, spontaneity, temperament -- temperament is the word -- I know nothing."



7. On the necessity of solitude

degas

"It seems to me that today, if the artist wishes to be serious -- to cut out a little original niche for himself, or at least preserve his own innocence of personality -- he must once more sink himself in solitude. There is too much talk and gossip; pictures are apparently made, like stock-market prices, by competition of people eager for profit; in order to do anything at all we need (so to speak) the wit and ideas of our neighbors as much as the businessmen need the funds of others to win on the market. All this traffic sharpens our intelligence and falsifies our judgment."



8. On the quaint notion of knowledge

degas

"What a delightful thing is the conversation of specialists! One understands absolutely nothing and it's charming."



9. On maintaining that youthful spirit

degas

"Everyone has talent at twenty-five. The difficulty is to have it at fifty."



10. On the gravity of imagination

deg

"It is very good to copy what one sees; it is much better to draw what you can't see any more but is in your memory. It is a transformation in which imagination and memory work together. You only reproduce what struck you, that is to say the necessary."



11. On the ambivalent appeal of fame

degas

"I should like to be famous and unknown."



12. On the incomparable power of art

degas

"I put it (a still life of a pear, made by Manet, ed.) there (on the wall, next to Ingres' Jupiter, ed.), for a pear like that would overthrow any god."

6 Before-And-After Home Remodels You Have To See To Believe

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As exciting as an interior change can be, nothing drops a jaw quite like a dramatic curb appeal overhaul. And if anything is proof of that, it's these incredible conversions from our friends at Porch.com. From bold additions to a new color scheme and enhanced lighting, these "afters" are a quality reminder of why home transformation TV shows exist. Slide the bar from side-to-side to see the dramatic shift.

"Modern makeover" doesn't do this transformation justice.

Modern Home by Paulsen Construction Services LLC.
To see the full project, visit Porch.com.




All it takes is a couple dramatic changes to breathe new life to an old house.

Hebb Remodel by Bay Area Design of the Berkshires
To see the full project, visit Porch.com.




New architectural details? Check. Improved lighting and landscaping? Check. Gorgeous curb appeal? Check.

Enatai Beach Remodel and Addition by Motionspace Architecture + Design PLLC
To see the full project, visit Porch.com.




Sometimes all you need to do is simplify -- and enlist the help of a fresh, new color.

Green Lake by Motionspace Architecture + Design PLLC
To see the full project, visit Porch.com.



A quality renovation can take a home from background to center stage.

Grover Remodel by Bay Area Design of the Berkshires
To see the full project, visit Porch.com.




Because even a little paint (and a big addition) go a long way.

Treasure Island Remodel by Bay Area Design of the Berkshires
To see the full project, visit Porch.com.




Have something to say? Check out HuffPost Home on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

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Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line "Project submission." (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

'Wynne Neilly: Female to 'Male,' Self-Portrait Project, Documents Artist's Transition

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A stunning new art exhibition is slated to open in Toronto this month that chronicles one artist's transition across the gender spectrum.

From artist Wynne Neilly comes "Wynne Neilly: Female to 'Male,'" a self-portrait project that documents Neilly's journey from female to "male" through "weekly photographs, recorded vocal changes, documents and objects that represent a segment or moment in his gender exploration," according to a statement sent to The Huffington Post.

The exhibit will open on July 23 at the Ryerson Image Centre in Toronto at 33 Gould Street on the Ryerson University campus. In anticipation of Neilly's opening, The Huffington Post chatted with the artist to discuss his project, what he is trying to communicate through his work and what he hopes attendees will take away.

wynne neilly

The Huffington Post: How did you get the idea for the project?
Wynne Neilly: Because I am a trans identified, queer visual artist, I am always thinking about how my queer environments and experiences can be translated conceptually into art. I knew that I was going to be starting hormones and it felt like this time sensitive experience that I wanted to be able to look back on and analyze in it's entirety at some point in the future. I had been photographing the queer/trans community in Toronto for a while, but I have never had intimate access to someone's physical transition in order to document it fully. I was about to go through this "second puberty" and I knew right away that I wanted to photograph myself every week for as long as I felt was necessary. I didn't have a digital camera at the time because I had sold it perviously to save up for top surgery, so I purchased a cheap instant camera and started getting my friends or roommate to take my photo every friday (the day I administer my testosterone shot). I didn't know where the project was going when I started this routine, but my priority was being able to have access to a visual representation of these stages in my transition. At the same time I began photographing myself I was meeting with the coordinators and directors at the R.I.C. After they saw my work in progress , we all came to an agreement that it would be a good idea to go forward with this and make a multi faceted show out of my experience.

wynne neilly

Were there any points where you wanted to stop or had second thoughts about documenting the project? Why or why not?
Yes and no. I knew at the very least I would be documenting this experience for myself first as a sort of archive. I very briefly had seconds thoughts in regards to showing the work, due to receiving unsupportive and ignorant feedback from my family. At the end of the day I realized that trans representation in art is really important and the reason that I am making my experience vulnerable and accessible is to hopefully help with the very ignorance I have experienced in my own life. Receiving a lack of support from someone really only fuels the purpose behind the art that I make.

The Huffington Post: The word "male" appears in quotes. Why is this?

I very strongly identify with being trans. My trans identity is not binary in the ways that society probably expects it to be. When heteronormative or mainstream society imagines a female born body transiting to a body that is perceived as masculine, there is an automatic reading of that person being "female to male" or FTM. This FTM experience might be very relatable and true for many trans people, but it is also completely wrong for others. I don't identify as being male at all. Putting it in quotations challenges what it means to be a trans masculine individual. Having "male" in the title acts to eliminate some of the stigma behind thinking there is only one way to transition, and there is only one type of trans experience.

wynne neilly

How do you feel about representations of transgender people in the media in recent months? Do you think things are getting better? What still needs to be addressed?
I think that in the last little while, trans representation in the media has been both positive and negative. It is however, extremely refreshing to see women like Laverne Cox and Janet Mock having a strong voice being represented in the media in recent months. Both of these women are doing amazing and important things for the advocacy of trans rights, especially for trans women of colour because those are the people that are unfortunately targeted the most. I do think things are getting better in a lot of ways but it does not mean that we as a society are in a place of comfort. It is so important for people to understand the effect that intersectionality has on trans people and their ability to live safely and comfortably in a community where suicide, violence and unemployment rates are alarmingly high.

What role do you think art has in addressing those representations?
Art can help create a common ground and an accessible platform for which mainstream society can connect with and better understand queer and trans identities.

wynne neilly

What do you hope viewers take away from the exhibition?
I was talking to my roommate about my upcoming show and some of my previous work that had been shown last year and their view was that my work essentially hands the viewers on a silver platter all the information that they might not be aware of, or understand. It is important to me that the viewer can walk away from this exhibition feeling less ignorant, more educated, and can understand that this work is about MY trans experience, not all trans experiences.

"Wynne Neilly: Female to 'Male'" will open with a public reception next Wednesday, July 23, from 6:00-8:00 p.m.at the Ryerson Image Centre. For more info on Wynne Neilly, visit his official website here.
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